12/25/2023 0 Comments The journey poem![]() Eliot Ted Kooser Terry Tempest Williams The Avett Brothers Tolkien W. (Bury the dead for fear that they walk to the grave in labour.) In the groin of the natural doorway I crouched like a tailor. Salinger Jack Gilbert Jack Kerouac Jane Hirshfield Jane Kenyon Jim Harrison Kevin Young Kim Addonizio Kim Dower life Linda Pastan Lisel Mueller Louise Glück Love Lyrics Margaret Atwood Marie Howe Mark Strand Mary Oliver Mother Naomi Shihab Nye Neil Gaiman Pablo Neruda Peace Philip Seymour Hoffman poetry Rainer Maria Rilke Rattle Ray Bradbury Raymond Carver Reader Favorite Reader Recommended Reading Repost Richard Jackson Richard Siken Robert Bly Robert Frost Ronald Koertge Ross Gay Rumi Sarah Kay Seamus Heaney slam poetry spring stardust Stephen Dunn Summer Sylvia Plath T.S. Twenty-four years remind the tears of my eyes. cummings Edward Hirsch Ellen Bass Emily Dickinson Faith Shearin Galway Kinnell Garrison Keillor Glen Hansard Gratitude grief J.D. Eliots dramatic monologue focuses upon the famous biblical story of the three kings from the East travelling to Bethlehem to pay homage. Join 4,744 other followers Care to read through the archives? Care to read through the archives? Categories Categories Random Authors and Topics Alice Walker Ali Shapiro Anaïs Nin Andrea Gibson Anne Sexton Annie Dillard Billy Collins Brian Dean Powers Caitlyn Siehl Cats Charles Bukowski Cheryl Strayed Clementine von Radics Compassion czeslaw milosz Dana Gioia David Foster Wallace David Levithan David Shumate David Whyte death Dennis O'Driscoll depression dogs Dorianne Laux e.e. Who makes the journey summary Who Makes the Journey is about growing old and growing up too fast. ![]() Poet David Whyte on Mary Oliver’s “The Journey” Bid me farewell, my brothers I bow to you all and take my departure. Thank you for your support, your interest, and your words. If you have a favorite poem you’d like to see featured on Words for the Year, please let me know via the contact page or on our recent post, “ On the Future of Words for the Year.” Hopefully we can share it with our readers. We may even have a few surprises lined up for you in the interim. I’m planning an April 1 return, just in time for the twentieth anniversary of National Poetry Month, though we may be back sooner. Words for the Year will be back after a short break. ![]() a journey that will bring you more love and devotion than you have ever known, yet will also. Thank you all for an enriching and rewarding two years, and for choosing to spend your days with us. When you bring a pet into your life, you begin a journey. It seems fitting to end pause our journey as we began it two years ago.
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